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Get Ready for a whole new Artificial Intelligence-based Messaging experience.

At I/O event Wednesday, Google unveiled its new messaging app named Allo: A smart messaging app powered with machine learning programming and the company’s newly announced AI bot Google Assistant.

You just have to sign up with your phone number and link your Google account to Allo, and you are all set to go.

AI Bot and Smart Replies:

With Allo, besides chatting with your friends and family using animated graphics and enlarging or shrinking text, you can also call Google within the app to buy things, plan events, and even think of what to reply, i.e. smart replies.

I found Smart Reply feature a bit fascinating, as it offers you some assumptions that you can reply when someone says something, shares a picture or something else. This feature learns to get more smart and productive over time as you use it.

Smart replies contain stickers and emoticons, as well. It recognizes pictures you or your friend sent by tapping into Google’s powerful image recognition search engine and learns your replies with the help of text.

As I said, Allo uses Google search engine that is powered by Google’s own Knowledge Graph, so you can launch it by typing @google in the chat window while chatting with your friends.

You can also make this AI bot to reserve restaurants and hotels, find sports scores, and everything that Google Search itself can do.

End-to-End Encryption:

Allo also offers end-to-end encryption, but it is not enabled by default. You have to enable "incognito" mode that turns on an end-to-end encryption system called Signal, designed by the privacy-focused non-profit organization Open Whisper Systems.

So you can opt for incognito mode in Allo, which is similar to what you'll already find in Google's Chrome browser if you want your conversations to be private and secure.

For those unaware, Tay is Millennial-inspired artificial intelligence chatbot unveiled by Microsoft on Wednesday that's supposed to talk with people on social media networks like Twitter, Kik and GroupMe and learn from them.

However, in less than 24 hours of its launch, the company pulled Tay down, following incredibly racist and Holocaust comments and tweets praising Hitler and bashing feminists.

In a blog post published Friday, Corporate Vice President Peter Lee of Microsoft Research apologized for the disturbing behavior of Tay, though he suggested the bad people might have influenced the AI teenager.

"We are deeply sorry for the unintended offensive and hurtful tweets from Tay, which do not represent who we are or what we stand for, nor how we designed Tay," Lee wrote. "Tay is now offline, and we will look to bring Tay back only when we are confident we can better anticipate malicious intent that conflicts with our principles and values."

Within 16 hours of her launch, Tay was professing her admiration for Hitler, her hatred for Jews and Mexicans, and graphically soliciting sex. She also blamed US President George Bush for 9/11 terrorist attack.

In one tweet, Tay expressed her thoughts on feminism, saying "I f***ing hate feminists and they should all die and burn in hell."

Tay's Offensive Tweets were Due to a Vulnerability

Since Tay was programmed to learn from people, some of her offensive tweets were reportedly achieved by people asking her to repeat what they'd written, allowing them to put words into her mouth. Though some of her responses were organic.

"A coordinated attack by a subset of people exploited a vulnerability in Tay," Lee wrote. "As a result, Tay tweeted wildly inappropriate and reprehensible words and images."

The exact nature of the bug is not disclosed, but the whole idea of Tay was an AI bot that mimics the casual speech patterns of millennials in order to "conduct research on conversational understanding."

Microsoft has since deleted as many as 96,000 tweets made by Tay and suspended the experiment. Though the company is not giving up on Tay and she will return.

Microsoft is working on every possible thing to limit technical exploits, but also very well know the fact that it cannot fully predict "all possible human interactive misuses without learning from mistakes."

The hyper-intelligent Artificial Intelligence that helps Tony Stark by doing data analysis, charging his armor, presenting information at crucial times and doing other business operations.

That's right — we are talking about J.A.R.V.I.S., Iron Man's personal assistant.

We all dream of having one of its kinds, and even Facebook's Founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has ambitions to live more like Iron Man's superhero Tony Stark.

While disclosing his 2016 resolution via a Facebook post on Sunday, Zuckerberg revealed that he is planning to build his own Artificial Intelligence to help him run his home and assist him at office — similar to Iron Man's digital butler Edwin Jarvis.

"You can think of it kind of like Jarvis in Iron Man," Zuckerberg wrote in his Facebook post. "I'll start teaching it to understand my voice to control everything in our home — music, lights, temperature and so on."

"I'll teach it to let friends in by looking at their faces when they ring the doorbell. I’ll teach it to let me know if anything is going on in (daughter) Max’s room that I need to check on when I'm not with her. On the work side, it’ll help me visualize data in VR to help me build better services and lead my organizations more effectively."

But you do not expect to run your own house and office with Facebook-branded Artificial Intelligence anytime soon. As, Zuckerberg said that he is building the robot for himself that works for the way his home is configured, not yours.

Other major technology companies, like Microsoft and Google, have also been doing more with Artificial Intelligence and Deep Learning in the past few years as well.

However, if the tech billionaire would be successful in creating a real-world Jarvis, then it would definitely take smart-home technology to the new heights.